// Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Licensed under the MIT license.
// See LICENSE in the project root for license information.

const macros = require('./_macros');

// Rule severity guidelines
// ------------------------
//
// Errors are generally printed in red, and may prevent other build tasks from running (e.g. unit tests).
// Developers should never ignore errors.  Warnings are generally printed in yellow, and do not block local
// development, although they must be fixed/suppressed before merging.  Developers will commonly ignore warnings
// until their feature is working.
//
// Rules that should be a WARNING:
// - An issue that is very common in partially implemented work (e.g. missing type declaration)
// - An issue that "keeps things nice" but otherwise doesn't affect the meaning of the code (e.g. naming convention)
// - Security rules -- developers may need to temporarily introduce "insecure" expressions while debugging;
//   if our policy forces them to suppress the lint rule, they may forget to reenable it later.
//
// Rules that should be an ERROR:
// - An issue that is very likely to be a typo (e.g. "x = x;")
// - An issue that catches code that is likely to malfunction (e.g. unterminated promise chain)
// - An obsolete language feature that nobody should be using for any good reason

function buildRules(profile) {
  return {
    // After an .eslintrc.js file is loaded, ESLint will normally continue visiting all parent folders
    // to look for other .eslintrc.js files, and also consult a personal file ~/.eslintrc.js.  If any files
    // are found, their options will be merged.  This is difficult for humans to understand, and it will cause
    // nondeterministic behavior if files are loaded from outside the Git working folder.
    //
    // Setting root=true causes ESLint to stop looking for other config files after the first .eslintrc.js
    // is loaded.
    root: true,

    // Disable the parser by default
    parser: '',

    plugins: [
      // Plugin documentation: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@rushstack/eslint-plugin
      '@rushstack/eslint-plugin',
      // Plugin documentation: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@rushstack/eslint-plugin-security
      '@rushstack/eslint-plugin-security',
      // Plugin documentation: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin
      '@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin',
      // Plugin documentation: https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-plugin-promise
      'eslint-plugin-promise'
    ],

    // Manually authored .d.ts files are generally used to describe external APIs that are  not expected
    // to follow our coding conventions.  Linting those files tends to produce a lot of spurious suppressions,
    // so we simply ignore them.
    ignorePatterns: ['*.d.ts'],

    overrides: [
      {
        // Declare an override that applies to TypeScript files only
        files: ['*.ts', '*.tsx'],
        parser: '@typescript-eslint/parser',
        parserOptions: {
          // The "project" path is resolved relative to parserOptions.tsconfigRootDir.
          // Your local .eslintrc.js must specify that parserOptions.tsconfigRootDir=__dirname.
          project: './tsconfig.json',

          // Allow parsing of newer ECMAScript constructs used in TypeScript source code.  Although tsconfig.json
          // may allow only a small subset of ES2018 features, this liberal setting ensures that ESLint will correctly
          // parse whatever is encountered.
          ecmaVersion: 2018,

          sourceType: 'module'
        },

        rules: {
          // ====================================================================
          // CUSTOM RULES
          // ====================================================================

          // The @rushstack rules are documented in the package README:
          // https://www.npmjs.com/package/@rushstack/eslint-plugin

          // RATIONALE:         See the @rushstack/eslint-plugin documentation
          '@rushstack/no-new-null': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         See the @rushstack/eslint-plugin documentation
          '@rushstack/typedef-var': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         See the @rushstack/eslint-plugin documentation
          //                    This is enabled and classified as an error because it is required when using Heft.
          //                    It's not required when using ts-jest, but still a good practice.
          '@rushstack/hoist-jest-mock': 'error',

          // ====================================================================
          // SECURITY RULES
          // ====================================================================

          // This is disabled for tools because, for example, it is a common and safe practice for a tool
          // to read a RegExp from a config file and use it to filter files paths.
          '@rushstack/security/no-unsafe-regexp': profile === 'node-trusted-tool' ? 'off' : 'warn',

          // ====================================================================
          // GENERAL RULES
          // ====================================================================

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/adjacent-overload-signatures': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          //
          // CONFIGURATION:     By default, these are banned: String, Boolean, Number, Object, Symbol
          '@typescript-eslint/ban-types': [
            'warn',
            {
              extendDefaults: false, // (the complete list is in this file)
              types: {
                String: {
                  message: 'Use "string" instead',
                  fixWith: 'string'
                },
                Boolean: {
                  message: 'Use "boolean" instead',
                  fixWith: 'boolean'
                },
                Number: {
                  message: 'Use "number" instead',
                  fixWith: 'number'
                },
                Object: {
                  message: 'Use "object" instead, or else define a proper TypeScript type:'
                },
                Symbol: {
                  message: 'Use "symbol" instead',
                  fixWith: 'symbol'
                },
                Function: {
                  message: [
                    'The "Function" type accepts any function-like value.',
                    'It provides no type safety when calling the function, which can be a common source of bugs.',
                    'It also accepts things like class declarations, which will throw at runtime as they will not be called with "new".',
                    'If you are expecting the function to accept certain arguments, you should explicitly define the function shape.'
                  ].join('\n')
                }

                // This is a good idea, but before enabling it we need to put some thought into the recommended
                // coding practices; the default suggestions are too vague.
                //
                // '{}': {
                //   message: [
                //     '"{}" actually means "any non-nullish value".',
                //     '- If you want a type meaning "any object", you probably want "Record<string, unknown>" instead.',
                //     '- If you want a type meaning "any value", you probably want "unknown" instead.'
                //   ].join('\n')
                // }
              }
            }
          ],

          // RATIONALE:         We require "x as number" instead of "<number>x" to avoid conflicts with JSX.
          '@typescript-eslint/consistent-type-assertions': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         We prefer "interface IBlah { x: number }" over "type Blah = { x: number }"
          //                    because code is more readable when it is built from stereotypical forms
          //                    (interfaces, enums, functions, etc.) instead of freeform type algebra.
          '@typescript-eslint/consistent-type-definitions': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Code is more readable when the type of every variable is immediately obvious.
          //                    Even if the compiler may be able to infer a type, this inference will be unavailable
          //                    to a person who is reviewing a GitHub diff.  This rule makes writing code harder,
          //                    but writing code is a much less important activity than reading it.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/explicit-function-return-type': [
            'warn',
            {
              allowExpressions: true,
              allowTypedFunctionExpressions: true,
              allowHigherOrderFunctions: false
            }
          ],

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/explicit-member-accessibility': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Object-oriented programming organizes code into "classes" that associate
          //                    data structures (the class's fields) and the operations performed on those
          //                    data structures (the class's members).  Studying the fields often reveals the "idea"
          //                    behind a class.  The choice of which class a field belongs to may greatly impact
          //                    the code readability and complexity.  Thus, we group the fields prominently at the top
          //                    of the class declaration.  We do NOT enforce sorting based on public/protected/private
          //                    or static/instance, because these designations tend to change as code evolves, and
          //                    reordering methods produces spurious diffs that make PRs hard to read.  For classes
          //                    with lots of methods, alphabetization is probably a more useful secondary ordering.
          '@typescript-eslint/member-ordering': [
            'warn',
            {
              default: 'never',
              classes: ['field', 'constructor', 'method']
            }
          ],

          // NOTE: This new rule replaces several deprecated rules from @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin@2.3.3:
          //
          // - @typescript-eslint/camelcase
          // - @typescript-eslint/class-name-casing
          // - @typescript-eslint/interface-name-prefix
          // - @typescript-eslint/member-naming
          //
          // Docs: https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/blob/main/packages/eslint-plugin/docs/rules/naming-convention.md
          '@typescript-eslint/naming-convention': [
            'warn',
            ...macros.expandNamingConventionSelectors([
              {
                // We should be stricter about 'enumMember', but it often functions legitimately as an ad hoc namespace.
                selectors: ['variable', 'enumMember', 'function'],

                format: ['camelCase', 'UPPER_CASE', 'PascalCase'],
                leadingUnderscore: 'allow',

                filter: {
                  regex: [
                    // This is a special exception for naming patterns that use an underscore to separate two camel-cased
                    // parts.  Example:  "checkBox1_onChanged" or "_checkBox1_onChanged"
                    '^_?[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*_[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*$'
                  ]
                    .map((x) => `(${x})`)
                    .join('|'),
                  match: false
                }
              },

              {
                selectors: ['parameter'],

                format: ['camelCase'],

                filter: {
                  regex: [
                    // Silently accept names with a double-underscore prefix; we would like to be more strict about this,
                    // pending a fix for https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/issues/2240
                    '^__'
                  ]
                    .map((x) => `(${x})`)
                    .join('|'),
                  match: false
                }
              },

              // Genuine properties
              {
                selectors: ['parameterProperty', 'accessor'],
                enforceLeadingUnderscoreWhenPrivate: true,

                format: ['camelCase', 'UPPER_CASE'],

                filter: {
                  regex: [
                    // Silently accept names with a double-underscore prefix; we would like to be more strict about this,
                    // pending a fix for https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/issues/2240
                    '^__',
                    // Ignore quoted identifiers such as { "X+Y": 123 }.  Currently @typescript-eslint/naming-convention
                    // cannot detect whether an identifier is quoted or not, so we simply assume that it is quoted
                    // if-and-only-if it contains characters that require quoting.
                    '[^a-zA-Z0-9_]',
                    // This is a special exception for naming patterns that use an underscore to separate two camel-cased
                    // parts.  Example:  "checkBox1_onChanged" or "_checkBox1_onChanged"
                    '^_?[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*_[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*$'
                  ]
                    .map((x) => `(${x})`)
                    .join('|'),
                  match: false
                }
              },

              // Properties that incorrectly match other contexts
              // See issue https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/issues/2244
              {
                selectors: ['property'],
                enforceLeadingUnderscoreWhenPrivate: true,

                // The @typescript-eslint/naming-convention "property" selector matches cases like this:
                //
                //   someLegacyApiWeCannotChange.invokeMethod({ SomeProperty: 123 });
                //
                // and this:
                //
                //   const { CONSTANT1, CONSTANT2 } = someNamespace.constants;
                //
                // Thus for now "property" is more like a variable than a class member.
                format: ['camelCase', 'UPPER_CASE', 'PascalCase'],
                leadingUnderscore: 'allow',

                filter: {
                  regex: [
                    // Silently accept names with a double-underscore prefix; we would like to be more strict about this,
                    // pending a fix for https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/issues/2240
                    '^__',
                    // Ignore quoted identifiers such as { "X+Y": 123 }.  Currently @typescript-eslint/naming-convention
                    // cannot detect whether an identifier is quoted or not, so we simply assume that it is quoted
                    // if-and-only-if it contains characters that require quoting.
                    '[^a-zA-Z0-9_]',
                    // This is a special exception for naming patterns that use an underscore to separate two camel-cased
                    // parts.  Example:  "checkBox1_onChanged" or "_checkBox1_onChanged"
                    '^_?[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*_[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*$'
                  ]
                    .map((x) => `(${x})`)
                    .join('|'),
                  match: false
                }
              },

              {
                selectors: ['method'],
                enforceLeadingUnderscoreWhenPrivate: true,

                // A PascalCase method can arise somewhat legitimately in this way:
                //
                // class MyClass {
                //    public static MyReactButton(props: IButtonProps): JSX.Element {
                //      . . .
                //    }
                // }
                format: ['camelCase', 'PascalCase'],
                leadingUnderscore: 'allow',

                filter: {
                  regex: [
                    // Silently accept names with a double-underscore prefix; we would like to be more strict about this,
                    // pending a fix for https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/issues/2240
                    '^__',
                    // This is a special exception for naming patterns that use an underscore to separate two camel-cased
                    // parts.  Example:  "checkBox1_onChanged" or "_checkBox1_onChanged"
                    '^_?[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*_[a-z][a-z0-9]*([A-Z][a-z]?[a-z0-9]*)*$'
                  ]
                    .map((x) => `(${x})`)
                    .join('|'),
                  match: false
                }
              },

              // Types should use PascalCase
              {
                // Group selector for: class, interface, typeAlias, enum, typeParameter
                selectors: ['class', 'typeAlias', 'enum', 'typeParameter'],
                format: ['PascalCase'],
                leadingUnderscore: 'allow'
              },

              {
                selectors: ['interface'],

                // It is very common for a class to implement an interface of the same name.
                // For example, the Widget class may implement the IWidget interface.  The "I" prefix
                // avoids the need to invent a separate name such as "AbstractWidget" or "WidgetInterface".
                // In TypeScript it is also common to declare interfaces that are implemented by primitive
                // objects, here the "I" prefix also helps by avoiding spurious conflicts with classes
                // by the same name.
                format: ['PascalCase'],

                custom: {
                  regex: '^_?I[A-Z]',
                  match: true
                }
              }
            ])
          ],

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/no-array-constructor': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          //
          // RATIONALE:         The "any" keyword disables static type checking, the main benefit of using TypeScript.
          //                    This rule should be suppressed only in very special cases such as JSON.stringify()
          //                    where the type really can be anything.  Even if the type is flexible, another type
          //                    may be more appropriate such as "unknown", "{}", or "Record<k,V>".
          '@typescript-eslint/no-explicit-any': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         The #1 rule of promises is that every promise chain must be terminated by a catch()
          //                    handler.  Thus wherever a Promise arises, the code must either append a catch handler,
          //                    or else return the object to a caller (who assumes this responsibility).  Unterminated
          //                    promise chains are a serious issue.  Besides causing errors to be silently ignored,
          //                    they can also cause a NodeJS process to terminate unexpectedly.
          '@typescript-eslint/no-floating-promises': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          '@typescript-eslint/no-for-in-array': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/no-misused-new': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         The "namespace" keyword is not recommended for organizing code because JavaScript lacks
          //                    a "using" statement to traverse namespaces.  Nested namespaces prevent certain bundler
          //                    optimizations.  If you are declaring loose functions/variables, it's better to make them
          //                    static members of a class, since classes support property getters and their private
          //                    members are accessible by unit tests.  Also, the exercise of choosing a meaningful
          //                    class name tends to produce more discoverable APIs: for example, search+replacing
          //                    the function "reverse()" is likely to return many false matches, whereas if we always
          //                    write "Text.reverse()" is more unique.  For large scale organization, it's recommended
          //                    to decompose your code into separate NPM packages, which ensures that component
          //                    dependencies are tracked more conscientiously.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/no-namespace': [
            'warn',
            {
              // Discourage "namespace" in .ts and .tsx files
              allowDeclarations: false,

              // Allow it in .d.ts files that describe legacy libraries
              allowDefinitionFiles: false
            }
          ],

          // RATIONALE:         Parameter properties provide a shorthand such as "constructor(public title: string)"
          //                    that avoids the effort of declaring "title" as a field.  This TypeScript feature makes
          //                    code easier to write, but arguably sacrifices readability:  In the notes for
          //                    "@typescript-eslint/member-ordering" we pointed out that fields are central to
          //                    a class's design, so we wouldn't want to bury them in a constructor signature
          //                    just to save some typing.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/parameter-properties': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         When left in shipping code, unused variables often indicate a mistake.  Dead code
          //                    may impact performance.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/no-unused-vars': [
            'warn',
            {
              vars: 'all',
              // Unused function arguments often indicate a mistake in JavaScript code.  However in TypeScript code,
              // the compiler catches most of those mistakes, and unused arguments are fairly common for type signatures
              // that are overriding a base class method or implementing an interface.
              args: 'none'
            }
          ],

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/no-use-before-define': [
            'error',
            {
              // Base ESLint options

              // We set functions=false so that functions can be ordered based on exported/local visibility
              // similar to class methods.  Also the base lint rule incorrectly flags a legitimate case like:
              //
              //   function a(n: number): void {
              //     if (n > 0) {
              //       b(n-1); //   lint error
              //     }
              //   }
              //   function b(n: number): void {
              //     if (n > 0) {
              //       a(n-1);
              //     }
              //   }
              functions: false,
              classes: true,
              variables: true,

              // TypeScript extensions

              enums: true,
              typedefs: true
              // ignoreTypeReferences: true
            }
          ],

          // TODO: This is a good rule for web browser apps, but it is commonly needed API for Node.js tools.
          // '@typescript-eslint/no-var-requires': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         The "module" keyword is deprecated except when describing legacy libraries.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/prefer-namespace-keyword': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         We require explicit type annotations, even when the compiler could infer the type.
          //                    This can be a controversial policy because it makes code more verbose.  There are
          //                    a couple downsides to type inference, however.  First, it is not always available.
          //                    For example, when reviewing a pull request or examining a Git history, we may see
          //                    code like this:
          //
          //                        // What is the type of "y" here? The compiler knows, but the
          //                        // person reading the code may have no clue.
          //                        const x = f.();
          //                        const y = x.z;
          //
          //                    Second, relying on implicit types also discourages design discussions and documentation.
          //                    Consider this example:
          //
          //                        // Where's the documentation for "correlation" and "inventory"?
          //                        // Where would you even write the TSDoc comments?
          //                        function g() {
          //                          return { correlation: 123, inventory: 'xyz' };
          //                        }
          //
          //                    Implicit types make sense for small scale scenarios, where everyone is familiar with
          //                    the project, and code should be "easy to write".  Explicit types are preferable
          //                    for large scale scenarios, where people regularly work with source files they've never
          //                    seen before, and code should be "easy to read."
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          '@typescript-eslint/typedef': [
            'warn',
            {
              arrayDestructuring: false,
              arrowParameter: false,
              memberVariableDeclaration: true,
              objectDestructuring: false,
              parameter: true,
              propertyDeclaration: true,

              // This case is handled by our "@rushstack/typedef-var" rule
              variableDeclaration: false,

              // Normally we require type declarations for class members.  However, that rule is relaxed
              // for situations where we need to bind the "this" pointer for a callback.  For example, consider
              // this event handler for a React component:
              //
              //     class MyComponent {
              //       public render(): React.ReactNode {
              //          return (
              //            <a href="#" onClick={this._onClick}> click me </a>
              //          );
              //        }
              //
              //        // The assignment here avoids the need for "this._onClick.bind(this)"
              //        private _onClick = (event: React.MouseEvent<HTMLAnchorElement>): void => {
              //          console.log("Clicked! " + this.props.title);
              //        };
              //      }
              //
              // This coding style has limitations and should be used sparingly.  For example, "_onClick"
              // will not participate correctly in "virtual"/"override" inheritance.
              //
              // NOTE: This option affects both "memberVariableDeclaration" and "variableDeclaration" options.
              variableDeclarationIgnoreFunction: true
            }
          ],

          // RATIONALE:         This rule warns if setters are defined without getters, which is probably a mistake.
          'accessor-pairs': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         In TypeScript, if you write x["y"] instead of x.y, it disables type checking.
          'dot-notation': [
            'warn',
            {
              allowPattern: '^_'
            }
          ],

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          eqeqeq: 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'for-direction': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'guard-for-in': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         If you have more than 2,000 lines in a single source file, it's probably time
          //                    to split up your code.
          'max-lines': ['warn', { max: 2000 }],

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-async-promise-executor': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         "|" and "&" are relatively rare, and are more likely to appear as a mistake when
          //                    someone meant "||" or "&&".  (But nobody types the other operators by mistake.)
          'no-bitwise': [
            'warn',
            {
              allow: [
                '^',
                // "|",
                // "&",
                '<<',
                '>>',
                '>>>',
                '^=',
                // "|=",
                //"&=",
                '<<=',
                '>>=',
                '>>>=',
                '~'
              ]
            }
          ],

          // RATIONALE:         Deprecated language feature.
          'no-caller': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-compare-neg-zero': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-cond-assign': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-constant-condition': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-control-regex': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-debugger': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-delete-var': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-duplicate-case': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-empty': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-empty-character-class': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-empty-pattern': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Eval is a security concern and a performance concern.
          'no-eval': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-ex-assign': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         System types are global and should not be tampered with in a scalable code base.
          //                    If two different libraries (or two versions of the same library) both try to modify
          //                    a type, only one of them can win.  Polyfills are acceptable because they implement
          //                    a standardized interoperable contract, but polyfills are generally coded in plain
          //                    JavaScript.
          'no-extend-native': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-extra-boolean-cast': 'warn',

          'no-extra-label': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-fallthrough': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-func-assign': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-implied-eval': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-invalid-regexp': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-label-var': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Eliminates redundant code.
          'no-lone-blocks': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-misleading-character-class': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-multi-str': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         It's generally a bad practice to call "new Thing()" without assigning the result to
          //                    a variable.  Either it's part of an awkward expression like "(new Thing()).doSomething()",
          //                    or else implies that the constructor is doing nontrivial computations, which is often
          //                    a poor class design.
          'no-new': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Obsolete language feature that is deprecated.
          'no-new-func': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Obsolete language feature that is deprecated.
          'no-new-object': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Obsolete notation.
          'no-new-wrappers': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-octal': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          'no-octal-escape': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-regex-spaces': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-return-assign': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Security risk.
          'no-script-url': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-self-assign': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-self-compare': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         This avoids statements such as "while (a = next(), a && a.length);" that use
          //                    commas to create compound expressions.  In general code is more readable if each
          //                    step is split onto a separate line.  This also makes it easier to set breakpoints
          //                    in the debugger.
          'no-sequences': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-shadow-restricted-names': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Obsolete language feature that is deprecated.
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-sparse-arrays': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Although in theory JavaScript allows any possible data type to be thrown as an exception,
          //                    such flexibility adds pointless complexity, by requiring every catch block to test
          //                    the type of the object that it receives.  Whereas if catch blocks can always assume
          //                    that their object implements the "Error" contract, then the code is simpler, and
          //                    we generally get useful additional information like a call stack.
          'no-throw-literal': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-unmodified-loop-condition': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-unsafe-finally': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake.
          'no-unused-expressions': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-unused-labels': 'warn',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-useless-catch': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Avoids a potential performance problem.
          'no-useless-concat': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         The "var" keyword is deprecated because of its confusing "hoisting" behavior.
          //                    Always use "let" or "const" instead.
          //
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\recommended.json
          'no-var': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Generally not needed in modern code.
          'no-void': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Obsolete language feature that is deprecated.
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'no-with': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Makes logic easier to understand, since constants always have a known value
          // @typescript-eslint\eslint-plugin\dist\configs\eslint-recommended.js
          'prefer-const': 'warn',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches a common coding mistake where "resolve" and "reject" are confused.
          'promise/param-names': 'error',

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'require-atomic-updates': 'error',

          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'require-yield': 'warn',

          // "Use strict" is redundant when using the TypeScript compiler.
          strict: ['error', 'never'],

          // RATIONALE:         Catches code that is likely to be incorrect
          // STANDARDIZED BY:   eslint\conf\eslint-recommended.js
          'use-isnan': 'error'

          // The "no-restricted-syntax" rule is a general purpose pattern matcher that we can use to experiment with
          // new rules.  If a rule works well, we should convert it to a proper rule so it gets its own name
          // for suppressions and documentation.
          // How it works:    https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-restricted-syntax
          // AST visualizer:  https://astexplorer.net/
          // Debugger:        http://estools.github.io/esquery/
          //
          // "no-restricted-syntax": [
          // ],
        }
      },
      {
        // For unit tests, we can be a little bit less strict.  The settings below revise the
        // defaults specified above.
        files: [
          // Test files
          '*.test.ts',
          '*.test.tsx',
          '*.spec.ts',
          '*.spec.tsx',

          // Facebook convention
          '**/__mocks__/*.ts',
          '**/__mocks__/*.tsx',
          '**/__tests__/*.ts',
          '**/__tests__/*.tsx',

          // Microsoft convention
          '**/test/*.ts',
          '**/test/*.tsx'
        ],
        rules: {
          // Unit tests sometimes use a standalone statement like "new Thing(123);" to test a constructor.
          'no-new': 'off',

          // Jest's mocking API is designed in a way that produces compositional data types that often have
          // no concise description.  Since test code does not ship, and typically does not introduce new
          // concepts or algorithms, the usual arguments for prioritizing readability over writability can be
          // relaxed in this case.
          '@rushstack/typedef-var': 'off',
          '@typescript-eslint/typedef': [
            'warn',
            {
              arrayDestructuring: false,
              arrowParameter: false,
              memberVariableDeclaration: true,
              objectDestructuring: false,
              parameter: true,
              propertyDeclaration: true,
              variableDeclaration: false, // <--- special case for test files
              variableDeclarationIgnoreFunction: true
            }
          ]
        }
      }
    ]
  };
}
exports.buildRules = buildRules;
